RSS to
RSS to WordPress
Turn any RSS feed into automated WordPress posts. Set it up once, never copy-paste again.
Paste your RSS feed URL into Feedloop, pick your WordPress account, and we'll poll the feed continuously. Every new item becomes a WordPress post — formatted via a per-platform template you control.
- Native WordPress publishing via the official API
- Per-platform message templates with {{title}}, {{link}}, {{description}}
- Deduplication built in — no double posts on feed refresh
Push long-form posts straight to your WordPress site via the REST API. Connect with an app password — no plugin install required. Title, body (up to 60,000 chars), and a featured image all handled in one publish call.
Frequently asked questions
- How does RSS to WordPress work?
- Paste your RSS feed URL into Feedloop, pick your WordPress account, and we poll the feed continuously. Yes — text-only RSS items publish fine, and WordPress happily accepts a featured image if your feed includes one (most do via <media:content> or the first <img> in the description). The per-output template editor controls formatting, and the live preview shows exactly how the post will look on WordPress before anything ships.
- Can I customize the WordPress post template?
- Yes. Each output gets its own template with variable chips for {{title}}, {{description}}, and {{link}} — click to insert at the cursor instead of typing. You can write a different template for WordPress than for, say, LinkedIn (same RSS source, different messaging per platform), and the preview re-renders as you type.
- Can I track clicks on the links Feedloop posts to WordPress?
- Yes — the built-in link shortener wraps any outbound URL into a feedloophq.com/l/xxxxx redirect with UTM parameters tagged per platform. Click counts roll up per-link, so you can see exactly which WordPress post drove which clicks without setting up Google Analytics.
- How do I know which RSS source performs best on WordPress?
- The Deeper insights tab includes a "same-source cross-platform comparison" cut — it groups posts by their originating RSS source and shows the engagement rate per platform side-by-side. You'll see exactly which feed gets the strongest pickup on WordPress vs. the rest. Combined with the source freshness cut (does WordPress engagement drop as posts age past the RSS pubDate), you can stop guessing which feeds are worth automating and which aren't. Both are available as MCP tools, so an AI assistant can do the comparison on demand and recommend which source to prioritize for WordPress.
- What happens if my RSS feed is slow or down?
- The poller retries with exponential backoff and never duplicates a post — we store the last item ID so even if the feed re-publishes, you won't see double posts on WordPress.